Choose File→Save As or press cmd+S. In the Save As text field, type a name for the saved page. From the Where pop-up menu, navigate to the location where you want to store the file in your system. To expand the sheet to allow navigation to any location in your. Right click to save an image on a Mac For most images, this is the best way to save them on a Mac, as it offers you the most control. Remember that using two fingers to tap on the track pad is the. Finally you have a great chance to see all news, new email, tweets, or new facebook updates even when you are not using your computer. For every address you can.
WebDAV with Mac OS X
Even without a special client installed, Mac OS X has WebDAV built into the Operating System.
- In the Go menu, of the Finder application, select Connect to Server.
- Type in your WebDAV URL in as the Server Address. Your WebDAV URL will be given to you when your website is set up, and will look like https://mywebdav.fsu.edu/yourFSUID, only yourFSUID will reflect your FSUID.
Optional: If you want to save this site to your Favorite Servers list, then click on the +. - Click on Connect.
- Type in your FSUID and password.
If you want the password to be saved for the next time you login too, then click the box next to 'Remember this password...'.
Now click OK. - You should now have a network icon on your desktop named 'yourFSUID' (where FSUID is really your FSUID). Click on the icon to bring up a listing of the files on the server. You can edit those files directly or upload files to the server in this directory.
Web Server On Mac
Disconnecting from the server
Be sure to disconnect from the server. Simply drag the network icon (named 'yourFSUID' - where yourFSUID is really your FSUID) to your Trash.
Or from your File menu, in the Finder, choose Eject 'yourFSUID'.
Or from your File menu, in the Finder, choose Eject 'yourFSUID'.
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May 4, 2013 11:51 PM
Great guide, thanks John.
Web Mac Games
Just a note, in case anyone has the same issue. At first I couldn't get this to work. I tried logging out and back in (still no joy), then restarting the mac (still no joy).
Try doing both of those first. However, if, like me, you still can't get the local host site to load, try the following: You should find a file at /Library/WebServer/Documents/index.html.en . This contains the text 'It works!' referred to in the post. What I did was duplicate that file in the same folder and changed the duplicate's name to 'index.html', leaving the original in situ.
Both local and user sites then loaded. After which, I was able to delete the duplicated file and everything now works without issue. Just to be clear, leave the original file index.html.en where it is, untouched and unharmed throughout this step.
![Web Web](/uploads/1/1/9/8/119855771/665629876.jpg)
Not sure why I had to take this mysterious detour - probably something local to my machine, but if you're having trouble after following the guide above, see if it helps.
May 4, 2013 11:51 PM